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| On Iran, Reality Bites |
BAD NEWS: the Obama administration
and the West hold a
lousy hand as they go into talks
with Iran. In a world of dreams
and miracles, the conversations,
starting on Saturday, would end
with the mullahs renouncing their drive
toward nuclear weapons, and the disappearance
of a thunderhead of foreboding
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| THE TWO
ECONOMIES |
THE creative dynamism of
American business is astounding
and a little terrifying. Over
the past five years, amid turmoil
and uncertainty, American
businesses have shed employees,
becoming more efficient and more
productive. According to The Wall
Street Journal on Monday, the
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Total aims to end gas leak by end of month
AFP
LONDON FRENCH energy giant Total aims to plug the leak of potentially explosive gas from its stricken North Sea rig by the end of April, a senior executive told a Scottish newspaper on Wednesday.
The abandoned Elgin platform, 150 miles (240 kilometres) off Aberdeen on Scotland’s east coast, has been spewing a cloud of gas since March 25.
Total is preparing to pump “heavy mud” into the leaking G4 well to cut off the gas in a “dynamic kill” operation, while simultaneously proceeding with plans to drill two relief wells.
Officials have previously warned that it could take up to six months to drill a relief well and a back-up at the rig, whose 283 crew were hastily evacuated after the leak was discovered.
But Total’s UK managing director Philippe Guys told the Aberdeen Press and Journal that if the dynamic kill operation is successful, the leak could be stopped before the start of May.
“If all goes as planned we envisage by the end of the month we should be having control of the well,” he told the newspaper. But he added: “We won’t rush to get these things done if we can’t do it safely.” Total, which has described the leak as its worst problem in the North Sea in a decade, was only able to airlift experts to the rig for the first time last week due to fears the platform could explode.
A second helicopter flew to Elgin on Tuesday, the company said, adding that several more flights would drop off equipment for the plugging operation “over the coming weeks”.
The company has hired specialists from Texas-based firm Wild Well Control, which was among those that worked to stem the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, to assist in the operation.
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